Place
Of Many Crows (Part 1) 14
August 1953 Daily Advertiser (Wagga Wagga) By
Eric Irvin |
A
brief history of the foundation of Wagga Wagga This
is the first of a series of articles, to appear daily, tracing the
history of the foundation and early growth of the town of Wagga
Wagga. The complete history will be published in book form later. |
For many years now the student of
Wagga's early history has been at the mercy of misleading statements
which have been repeated at every opportunity.Writers,
in newspapers and elsewhere, have relied on these reports without,
apparently, ever checking their source or their authority. It Is no wonder, then, that Wagga
should have celebrated the achievement of its first century in
1946, in the mis- taken idea that the town of Wagga
was established in 1846. (1) Tbe truth is that this
event was celebrated three years too soon. I Here are a few of the mis- statements regarding the foundation of
Wagga which have been printed again and again over the past 40 to
80 1years, and which have stood solidly in the path of the, serious
reader in search of the truth. 'In 1847, Wagga Wagga
was proclaimed a township; in 1848 the first allotments were sold
by auction in Sydney.' (A correspondent writing in the Wagga Wagga Express and Murrumbidgee Advertiser May 28.
1859). 'Norton informed me on more than one occasion that he
came to Wagga as ChiefConstable ln
1845.' (Early Wagga, by James Gormly. M.L.C., in The AdvertiserSeptember 5, 1905.) 'John Joseph Roberts
erect- ed the first hotel at Wagga,probably in 1846, but I think the licence
dated from Janu- ary
1, 1847' (As above). 'Wagga Wagga (station) was originally
owned by Robert Holt Best. The first home stead was built in 1832.'
(The History of Wagga Wagga. compiled by William J. Gar- land
1913). ''R. H. Best, who settled in the
distinct in 1832, named his station Wagga Wagga."
(J. F. Baylis in R.A.H.S. Journal No 13,
1927). So much confusion
The first of these quota- tions;
may be cited as the per- fect reason why there
has been so much confusion in regard to the true story of Wagga's
foundation. Here we have the casee of a man
only 10 years removed from the events in which he participat- ed, and about
which he writes, and yet his facts (as it will be seen) are
quite wrong. Moving considerably fur- ther afield, it will be found that even a specialist
such as S. H. Roberts can be equally careless about Wagga. In his book,
"The Squatting Age in Australia', he says: " ... even
townships were coming, first at Gundagai, then Al- bury, and then
Wagga Wagga (1847)." And there is con- fusion implicit in his
earlier statement that, "Best, for example, came from Parra- matta to the new Wagga in 1832." Wagga,
like so many other Australian inland towns, owes its existence
solely to the pastoralists who, either them- selves or through their proxies, trod in the footsteps of the
explorers in a never- tiring search for new grazing lands. It
was Inevitable that the river flats of the Murrum- bidgee should attract the hardier settler, who was
pre- pared to endure any personal discomfort and hardship an overland
Journey of 300 miles from Sydney might entail for the chance of
building and fattening his flocks and herds on good land,
and thereby producing better stock or a better wool crop. The
history of Wagga, therefore, begins with the discovery of the Murrumbidgee River. Although he
didn't know it at the time, John Oxley, in his exploration of the Lach- lan River -n 1817,
came within 25 miles of discovering the Murrumbidgee. He was not looking
for this river, but it is apparent from his journals that he was
aware of another, as yet unfound body of water in the interior, and
not far from the areas he had set himself to explore. (2). Heard
from natives Explorers and others had heard at various times from inland
natives of a river call- ed the Morumbidgee, or, as Dr. Charles Throsby trans- lated the word, "Mur, rum, bid, gie." Credit for the discovery of lake
George goes to Throsby, for it was he who, having heard from the
natives of the existance of a lake called"Wee, ree, waa", fitted out a small party and set them the task
of finding the lake. Hear- ing in a similar
manner the existence of the Murrum- bidgee River, he determined that this also,
should be found end explored. It is in a letter he vroote to Governor Mac- quarie
on September 4, 1820, reporting the discovery of take George
(Wee, ree, waa) that
we have the first record- ed reference to the Murrum- bidgee (3).
On May 10, 1821, Throsby wrote a further
letter to the Governor, in which he stated that he set out
in search of the Murrumbidgee on March 18th. From this
letter it is ap- parent that he reached the spot
on which Canberra now stands, and then pushed on to the
Murrumbidgee just be-low Tharwa. The next explorers known to have
reached the Murrum- bidgee
were Hume and Hovell, who, in 1824, crossed the river on their
journey to Port Phillip. In his report on this expedition
Hamilton Hume wrote: "About three o'clock in the afternoon
of the 19th (Octo- ber,
1824) we made the Mur-rumbidgee River, at Marjuri- gong, near Yass." (4) They were
followed five years later (1829) by Captain Charles Sturt, who
travelled down the Murrumbidgee with the object of tracing its course
and discovering the Murray. He is believed to have been the first
white man to set foot on the site on which Wagga now stands. "Captain
Charles Sturt ex- plored the Murrumbidgee in 1829. On December 3 he was at
Wantabadgery (which he calls Pontebadgery). He
pass- ed what is now
Wagga on De- cember 5 or 6. and
Narran- dera on December 10, 1829." (5). First
settlers Three years after this, the first settlers had pushed down to
the site of Wagga with their stock. In 1832 the Tompson
familybrought their stock to the right (North
Wagga) bank of the river, and the Bests tothe
left (South Wagga) bank. It is fairly certain that the Tompson and Best brothers, in charge of a number of employees
or shepherds who would be either assigned or hired servants,
brought the stock to what they or their fathers had decided upon as a
favorable spot, and there left it in the
charge of shep-herds. Certainly homesteads were
not then erected, nor were the womenfolk of these families then
brought to Wagga. These shepherds lived in crude hut-shelters
of slabs and bark (or, in other cases, the type of shelter or
gunyah they had seen the aborigines erect) which they erected themselves,
and it was com-mon practice to leave them for
weeks in charge of grazing stock. Life under these conditions was
certainly no life for a woman - not in the initial stages, at
least. Nor would people of the social standing of the Bests and Tompsons have thought it either desir able
or necessary to move their families to a new loca-tion
before adequate housing was provided. "The earliest occupants
of the Riverina were shepherds, stockmen and station
workers who looked after the great station properties of that
region. The lessees of these stations lived elsewhere, and it
was not until the 'fifties and 'sixties that the squatters began
to reside on their hold ings." (6). REFERENCES (1)
''The Daily Advertiser," April 25 1946. This news paper, first
established in 1868, was known as "The
Wagga Wagga Advertiser and Riverine
Reporter." (2) "Australian Discovery by. Land",
edited by Ernest Scott. 1929. (3) Royal Australian Historical Society.
Journal and Pro- ceedings, Vol. VII, Part 5, 1921
Exploration between the Wingecarribee, Shoal- heven, Macquarie and Mur- rumbldgee
Rivers, by R. H.Cambage. (4) "A Brief
Statement of Facts in Connection with an Overland Expedition from
Lake George to Port Phillip in 1824". by Hamil- ton Hume. Second edition 1873. (5)
R.A.H.S. Journal and Pro- ceedings. Vol. XXXVII. Parte
I to V, 1952: The, Western Riverine. A
History; of its Development, by James Jervis. (6) Ditto. |